#MartinParr introduction text #MaryHamill #SemperAugustus a #PhotoBook to come soon a #LimitedEdition of 250 copies with a #Signed CPrint 13×17.3cm numbered by the author in a elegant #Clamshell box#Photography #ArtofPerfection #FirstBook

Pierre Bessard

8 mai 2016

We all love tulips. The beautiful flowers we put in vases, witnessing how their petals slowly open to reveal the stunning colours and patterns that are their hallmark. Come late spring, early summer, our living rooms will be brightened by these floral displays, in all shapes and colours. But after a week they start to fade as the petals fall to the ground.
The tulip was introduced into Europe at the end of the 16th century, having been exported from the Ottoman Empire. The Dutch took to the flower and started to grow tulips commercially. So great was the demand for tulips, and the prestige associated with them, the Dutch people were overtaken by what is now known as ‘Tulip Mania.’ Many merchants made a lot of money as the prices of the bulbs escalated at an unprecedented pace, increasing hugely until, eventually, the economic bubble burst in 1637.
Most famous and desirable of all were the bulbs of the Semper Augustus tulip flower, prestigious and beautiful, with distinctive red and white streaky petals. In his famous book on the tulip mania, published in 1841 (‘Popular Delusions of the Madness of Crowds’) the author Charles Mackay explains how one Semper Augustus bulb was exchanged for 12 acres of land. There was also a futures market which collapsed, the first known reference to pre-selling.
The Semper Augustus has retained its position as the most celebrated of all tulips; these are grown and displayed, against fierce competition, in spring flower shows across the globe.
Mary Hamill has created her own version of this famous flower, but with a dreadful and wonderful twist. For these flower like objects turn out to be her own menstrual cycles. She informs us of the date of the month they were created and with the thirteen images takes us through a full calendar year.
Photography has the amazing ability to play tricks and this is one of the most remarkable deceits I have encountered. This trick also has many layers of meaning, almost too subtle to explain here, for these should be explored by the viewer. The Semper Augustus has a very short time to look its best – two weeks at most – but Mary Hamill’s delightful book can outlive the real tulips, and be savoured for many years to come.
Martin Parr